diff -r 479f02b4c705 -r 20f864eaec94 Annotation.st --- a/Annotation.st Sat Oct 27 19:44:35 2012 +0200 +++ b/Annotation.st Mon Oct 29 11:25:12 2012 +0100 @@ -89,9 +89,9 @@ A pragma is a literal message pattern that occurs between angle brackets at the start of a method after any temporaries. A common example is the primitive pragma: - but one can add one's own and use them as metadata attached to a method. - Because pragmas are messages one can browsse senders and implementors and perform them. - One can query a method for its pragmas by sendng it the pragmas message, which answers an Array of instances of me, + but you can add your own and use them as metadata attached to a method. + Because pragmas are messages one can browse senders and implementors and perform them. + One can query a method for its pragmas by sending it the pragmas message, which answers an Array of instances of me, one for each pragma in the method. I can provide information about the defining class, method, its selector, as well as the information about the pragma keyword and its arguments. See the two 'accessing' protocols for details. @@ -685,11 +685,11 @@ !Annotation class methodsFor:'documentation'! version - ^ '$Header: /cvs/stx/stx/libbasic/Annotation.st,v 1.11 2012-10-25 12:16:46 cg Exp $' + ^ '$Header: /cvs/stx/stx/libbasic/Annotation.st,v 1.12 2012-10-29 10:25:12 cg Exp $' ! version_CVS - ^ '$Header: /cvs/stx/stx/libbasic/Annotation.st,v 1.11 2012-10-25 12:16:46 cg Exp $' + ^ '$Header: /cvs/stx/stx/libbasic/Annotation.st,v 1.12 2012-10-29 10:25:12 cg Exp $' ! version_SVN